J.J. Abrams: Previously on the Stern Show…

In 2013, the in demand director talked "Star Wars," "Star Trek," and the weirdest meeting ever with Eddie Murphy

Nov. 25, 2015

Photo: The Howard Stern Show

Today on the Stern Show: JJ Abrams and Mick The Nerd

Director J.J. Abrams last dropped by the Stern Show in 2013,
right before the release of his follow up "Star Trek" flick, "Into Darkness."
An interview with Howard always includes some mind-blowing stories and J.J. had
plenty to share that morning. Who had the worst audition he ever encountered?
Why did Eddie Murphy turn off all the lights during a meeting with J.J.? And
how close he came to turning down "Star Wars."

Here's what J.J. Abrams said…previously on the Stern Show.

J.J. AWAKENS THE FORCE

Photo: Disney

Millions of moviegoers have already bought their tickets to
see "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" this December. But the anticipated release
was almost directed by someone other than J.J. Abrams.

"I was working on 'Star Trek' and I got a call through my
agents about if I would be interested," J.J. explained to Howard. "I was in the
middle of this insane movie. I thought, 'I can't even think about it.' So I
said, 'no thank you,' and went on my way. I think they went to a few other
people and had conversations and ended up coming back to me and asking if we
could just sit down."

J.J. took a meeting with Kathleen Kennedy – a longtime film
producer, famous for working with Steven Spielberg, who now holds the title of
president of Lucasfilm.

Even though J.J. and his wife Katie had made plans to go
away for six months after "Star Trek" wrapped, he knew after that meeting with Kennedy that
taking on "Star Wars" was a once in a lifetime opportunity.

"Now, we're going to go to London to shoot the movie. So,
we're going away but we're not going away how we planned."

MAKING 'STAR TREK'

Photo: Paramount Pictures

Do you have to be a hardcore "Star Trek" fan in order to
make a great "Star Trek" movie? Evidently, no. J.J. admitted to Howard in 2013
that he didn't grow up watching any of the crews of the USS Enterprise.

"I was never a 'Star Trek' fan," J.J. said, explaining that
it was much more important to him to make a movie that worked on its own, not something that imitated the films that came before it.

A big part of what has made the new "Star Trek" films
successful is J.J.'s mastery of shooting action
sequences. He took Howard through his process, detailing how he plans out a scene while
directing a movie.

"One of the fun things is, you figure out what do you want
this shot to be - how do you want it to look?" J.J. said. "A lot of times you
can get into crazy CG stuff but then it looks fake. So, if you think, 'well, how
do I make it look real?' A lot of the time, exterior scenes are shot on a stage
and your eye goes, "that's not sunlight."

J.J. opted for building stages outside, all on one lot,
which not only gave the scenes of "Star Trek" more realism, it helped keep
production and crews all in one place.

MOVIE MAGIC

So what does J.J. say is the best and worst part of making
films?

"People ask me what my favorite part of writing, producing
and directing is," J.J. told Howard. "When you're directing, it means that the
writing and producing is worked. To me, the hardest part is the producing part
– getting it all figured out."

Part of producing a film is finding the right actors for the
right parts, something J.J. is not a fan of.

"I don't like sitting through casting," J.J. admitted. "It
drives me crazy. People come in, I want to give them the part, but no one is
going to get the part but one person.

During casting for his hit ABC series "Alias," J.J.
encountered the worst audition he had ever seen, explaining: "Only one time
have I seen someone come in, who was the fucking worst, who I gave a little
direction to, and turned it around and got the part."

That actor was up for a bad guy role on the series and his first
take was a bit more over the top than what J.J. was looking for. After giving
the guy a quick note, J.J. says the actor turned into "Laurence Olivier" and
ended up landing the part.

A MEETING WITH EDDIE MURPHY

Photo: PRPhotos

Early on in J.J.'s now impressive career, he received a
phone call saying Eddie Murphy wanted to meet with him. The Eddie Murphy.

"I was a huge Eddie Murphy fan," J.J. said. "So I went in to
meet Eddie Murphy and it was this office with no lights on. Like, a huge
office! And there were these big guys there, sort of bodyguards. Eddie's at the
desk and I sit in this chair and I'm not a very tall person as it is but I just
sink into this chair. And he was really,
incredibly serious and very quiet. I just thought this was what he liked to do.
It was a very uncomfortable meeting. It was one of those things where, a few
minutes in, it felt like he had thought that I called the meeting. There was no
connection. It was the weirdest thing. It never got anywhere. It was like me
meeting someone who was some sort of an idol and being kind of scared. It felt
like a meeting that had it not been in Hollywood, there would have been plastic
on the floor."

Was he trying to be intimidating? J.J. still isn't sure but a
few years later, he ran into Eddie again and the two had a "genuine"
conversation.

HARDCORE FANS

Photo: PRPhotos

Even though J.J. was never a "Star Trek" fan boy (he's never
even attended a convention) he still appreciates how important the devoted
Trekkies are to the film franchise. While shooting the second installment, fans
and members of the press tried to take photos of the set, some even using
telephoto lenses from half a mile away.

"I am so grateful to those people because you want people to
give a shit," J.J. said. "You want people to care. If there aren't people who
are trying to find out what's going on, then you gotta have to try and trump it
up and make noise."

There was a time though that the fans went to far in order to
find out what J.J. was up to. An early draft of a script J.J. had written for a
Superman movie was leaked onto the Internet. The website that published it
provided a scene-by-scene analysis of what J.J. had initially put on the page.

"One morning, I got an email from a friend of mine saying I
should go check out this website and I did," J.J. said. "And on the website was
this review, scene for scene, of this early draft of the script. It was this
massive, endless review. And that wasn't even the worst part. It was the
comments afterward."

Fans ripped the proposed film apart and Warner Bros. ended
up shutting down the Abrams project.

"It's one of the reasons why I've become more paranoid,"
J.J. told Howard about how the incident has changed him.

UNDER PRESSURE

Don't feel too bad for J.J., though. He's living the dream
as the director of the next "Star Wars" installment.

"When I saw 'Star Wars,' I was 11 years old and it was
just…that was it."

Most are banking on "The Force Awakens" to be a blockbuster – another hit in a long line of successes for Mr. Abrams. How does he deal with the pressure that comes from
taking the reigns of such a beloved franchise?

"I always feel pressure. But I also feel like, what the
pressure means is there are people who care about these projects and there's an
opportunity to provide them with entertainment and some magic. There's an
audience waiting for something and to me, that's a gift."

Tune in on Monday for an all new J.J. Abrams interview to
hear what he'll say next and be sure to check out "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" in theaters this month!